Enterprise bookmarking

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Enterprise bookmarking is a method for

knowledge tags.[1]

In early versions of the software, these tags are applied as non-hierarchical

Examples of this software are
structured and semi-structured data and are collected in tag profiles.[3]

History

Enterprise bookmarking is derived from

IBM Lotus Connections. The second significant commercial release was Cogenz in September 2007.[6]

Since these early releases, Enterprise bookmarking platforms have diverged considerably. The most significant new release was the

Jumper 2.0 platform, with expanded and customizable knowledge tagging fields.[7]

Differences

Versus social bookmarking

In a social bookmarking system, individuals create personal collections of bookmarks and share their bookmarks with others. These centrally stored collections of Internet resources can be accessed by other users to find useful resources. Often these lists are publicly accessible, so that other people with similar interests can view the links by category or by the tags themselves. Most social bookmarking sites allow users to search for bookmarks which are associated with given "tags", and rank the resources by the number of users which have bookmarked them.[8]

Enterprise bookmarking is a method of tagging and linking any information using an expanded set of tags to capture knowledge about data.

Enterprise 2.0
methodologies to capture specific knowledge and information that organizations consider proprietary and are not shared on the public Internet.

Tag management

Enterprise bookmarking tools also differ from social bookmarking tools in the way that they often face an existing

taxonomy. Some of these tools have evolved to provide Tag management which is the combination of uphill abilities (e.g. faceted classification, predefined tags, etc.) and downhill gardening abilities (e.g. tag renaming, moving, merging) to better manage the bottom-up folksonomy
generated from user tagging.

See also

Notes and references

  1. ^ Scott Golder and Bernardo A. Huberman, The Structure of Collaborative Tagging Systems Archived 2010-12-23 at the Wayback Machine, Journal of Information Science, 32(2). 198–208, 2006
  2. ^ Martin Halvey and Mark T. Keane, An Assessment of Tag Presentation Techniques, poster presentation at WWW 2007, 2007
  3. ^ Sreekumar Sukumaran and Ashish Sureka, Integrating Structured and Unstructured Data Using Text Tagging and Annotation, Business Intelligence Journal, 2009
  4. ^ David Millen Jonathan Feinberg and Bernard Kerr, IBM Dogear Archived 2009-12-27 at the Portuguese Web Archive, Queue Vol. 3 No. 9 – November 2005, 2005
  5. ^ Stockwell, Thomas (January 28, 2007). "Lotus Announcements at Lotusphere 2007". MC Press Online, LP. Retrieved 4 July 2014.
  6. ^ "Cogenz takes enterprise social bookmarking behind the firewall". Webwire. 11 September 2008.
  7. ^ "Jumper Networks Press Release Jumper 2.0 Released under the GPL" (PDF). Jumper Networks, Inc. 26 March 2009. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2009-05-30.
  8. ^ David Millen Jonathan Feinberg and Bernard Kerr, Social Bookmarking in the Enterprise, Queue Vol. 3 No. 9 – November 2005, 2005
  9. ^ "Jumper 2.0 Tags the Enterprise". John Udell, Web 2.0 News. 17 April 2009. Archived from the original on 27 May 2009. Retrieved 6 May 2009.